The invention concerns the field of cryptography.
Through the use of cryptography, a message can only be read by its recipient. A key is used to encrypt the message. The owner of the key is the only person who can read the message received.
The encryption key must therefore be transmitted by the sender to the recipient of the encrypted message. Transmission is carried out such that only the recipient of the encrypted message receives this encryption key. Interception by a third party of the encryption key is detected by the sender or the recipient. Consequently, the encryption key detected as intercepted is not used for the message encryption.
The principle of transmitting encryption keys is used, for example, in quantum cryptography. It consists of using physical properties to guarantee the integrity of a received encryption key.
The encryption key consists of a bit sequence. The encryption key is encoded on a flow of particles. The particles may be, for example, photons or may be other types of particles. In the case where the particles are photons, a time shift of a pulse on a light flow is associated with each bit. The light flow, encoded in the time domain and comprising a flow of photons, is then attenuated. The probability of detecting two photons associated with the same bit is then negligible.
The transmitter (Alice) can encode the encryption key on two nonorthogonal states. The pulses sent by Alice have a time width of ΔT and amplitude such that the probability of detecting a photon throughout the pulse duration is equal to one (state with one photon) or sufficiently low so that the probability of detecting two photons is negligible faced with the probability of detecting one (coherent state).
In reception, the detection states are chosen in a base with two states. These two detection states are orthogonal respectively to each state of the base used by the sender. During transmission, the transmission and detection states are chosen independently of each other.
If the states chosen by the transmitter and the receiver are orthogonal, the detection probability is zero. The measurement result is certain, there is no ambiguity. If they are not orthogonal, there are two possible measurement results since the probability of detecting the photon is 0.5. If the photon is detected, it is certain that the transmitter state is at 45° to the receiver state. There is no ambiguity. Irrespective of the configuration, there is always a possibility of not detecting the photon. This non detection of the photon makes deducing the choice of transmitter shift, using the receiver state, ambiguous. This ambiguity concerning the shift is used in quantum cryptography.
Detection of the photon is a point process which can occur at any time during the pulse. The spy (Eve) can, for example, measure all the pulses sent by Alice. She has a detector of quantum efficiency equal to one. For each pulse transmitted by Alice, she detects the corresponding photon. If she can instantaneously retransmit to the receiver Bob pulse with one photon but time width of ΔT′ shorter than that sent by Alice, she can also read the information without being unmasked as shown in
Bob then in fact receives shorter pulses but he cannot detect this. The probability of detecting a photon is the same as when the pulses would not have been intercepted. In addition, their time position is consistent with the encoding imposed by Alice. Half of the pulses retransmitted by Eve result in exploitable information (unambiguous) and the other half in ambiguous results. When Alice and Bob compare the key portions, they will be unable to detect an increase in the error rate which would indicate the presence of a spy.
Consequently, if the pulse duration is not fixed, a third party, the spy (Eve), can measure the information transmitted by the transmitter (Alice) and return an equivalent signal to the receiver (Bob) without being detected. Eve then has a copy of the information, without being unmasked. This type of spying is difficult to carry out in practice but the possibility of this principle cannot be excluded.
This invention proposes a means of preventing this type of spying by using a minimum state. This minimum state is one where the product of the uncertainty of the encoding parameter and its conjugated parameter is equal to its minimum value.
This invention concerns a method to encode digital data on one of the parameters x of a particle flow intended for transmission such that the probability of transmitting two particles per period is negligible, wherein the parameter x and its conjugated parameter are in a minimum state (Δx. Δy=1).
The invention proposes a method of decoding digital data encoded such that two conjugated parameters x and y in the encoded particle flow are in a minimum state, the probability of detecting two particles per period being negligible, wherein it comprises at least:
The decoding method is implemented by a decoder of digital data encoded such that two conjugated parameters x and y in the encoded particle flow are in a minimum state, the probability of detecting two particles per period being negligible, wherein the decoder comprises at least:
The advantages and features of the invention will be clearer on reading the following description, given as an example, illustrated by the attached figures representing in:
a), a first variant of the decoder according to the invention,
b), a second variant of the decoder according to the invention,
The parameters satisfying the minimum state chosen as an example in the figures and the description are the time width ΔT of the pulse carrying the information and its conjugate: the spectral width Δv of this pulse. The principles and system can be applied for all types of encoding parameter x (time width, spectral width, polarization, position, pulse, beam size, beam divergence, etc.) and its parameter y such that they satisfy the minimum state relation Δx.Δy=1.
On
To prevent the type of spying described above and shown on
This type of encoder may include:
In the example shown in
If the time width ΔT and the spectral width Δv of the pulses transmitted satisfy the minimum state relation Δv.ΔT=1, a first variant of the decoder 3 proposed by
On
Pulses close to the minimum state relation can be produced, for example, by mode-locked lasers 11+2 in an encoder 1. The time shifts are produced outside the laser with a delay gate 13. The use of pulses produced by mode-locked lasers 11+2 has significant practical consequences.
Typically in fact, the pulse durations are between 10 ps and 100 fs. These values are much less than the response times of the existing photon counters (31′) (typically 1 ns). It is then impossible to distinguish between a pulse shifted and a pulse not shifted. This function can be carried out by an electrically controlled gate (not shown) located in front of the photon counter (31′). The possibility of producing this type of gate largely depends on the response times obtained with the technology used, for example: 10 GHz with an electro-optical modulator.
The pulses satisfying the minimum state relation in the time-frequency space protect against this type of spying described by
If the pulses used are too short with respect to the gate switching time, an interferometer can be used between the transmitter and the receiver as shown on
The encoding/decoding systems and methods using the minimum state relation for quantum cryptography have been described above for particles with time encoding. The conjugated parameter is then the spectral width of the pulse carrying the information to be transmitted. It is therefore possible to separate by simple filtering on the conjugated parameter the transmitted particles which do not satisfy the minimum state relation.
The use of time width and spectral width parameters is only an example of realization. Generally, all types of parameter x (time width, spectral width, polarization, position; pulse, beam size, beam divergence, etc.) can be used to carry the information to be transmitted. The invention is then based on the fact that this parameter x and its conjugated parameter y (respectively: spectral width, time width, conjugated parameter of the polarization, pulse, position, beam divergence, beam size, etc.) satisfy the minimum state relation Δx′Δy=1 on transmission. On reception, it is then easy to separate the particles satisfying the minimum state relation by filtering according to the conjugated parameter y. The filtering can be used to separate the particles received satisfying the relation Δx1.Δy1≧1 but where Δx1≠Δx or Δy1≠Δy (Δx and Δy fixed by the encoder and known a prior by the decoder) from the particles characterized Δx and Δy.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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00 14490 | Nov 2000 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR01/03503 | 11/9/2001 | WO | 00 | 10/8/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/39663 | 5/16/2002 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040057526 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |